The Saints’
Shore
Way

a walk along the northern coast of Brittany

This route
of 133kms along the coast between Roscoff and Lannion, via the historic town of
Morlaix, is the subject of a new walking
guide. The project has been sponsored by Morlaix and Lannion tourist boards to
promote the not-so-well-known area to an English-speaking public. It follows an
exceptionally beautiful stretch of coastline, with the nature reserve in the
Baie de Morlaix a special attraction for bird-watchers, and plenty of impressively
weird granite rock formations.

The idea
came from the Saints Way in Cornwall. This 42km trail from Padstow to
Fowey is a suggested route taken by holy men and their followers during the
great period of migrations mainly from Wales during the Dark Ages. Cutting
across the Cornish peninsula by land would avoid dangerous seas around Land’s End. From Fowey it is envisaged that
they sailed for Armorica (Brittany didn’t exist then) to evangelise the region or
went on to Jerusalem or Compostela on pilgrimage.

The Saints' Shore Way covers many arrival sites of these
men and settlements still associated with them today like St-Pol-de-Léon,
Carantec, Locquirec and Loquémeau. Chapels and sacred springs dedicated to
saints like St Guenolé, St Efflam, St Samson and St Ivy can also be found along
the way.

Other
themes in the guidebook link Britain and Brittany too: the linen trade which brought
great wealth to Morlaix and the surrounding area in the 16th and 17th
centuries, the clash of corsairs in the Channel and the activities of
the Resistance during the occupation of Brittany in WWII.

The
guidebook also covers many sites of historical or archaeological interest on
the route, including the Cairn of Barnenez, the Pointe de Primel, St Jean du
Doigt and Le Yaudet. The key-point towns of Roscoff, Morlaix and Lannion have
their own sections and town maps for fuller exploration. Public transport
linking all three makes walking the Saints Shore Way in entirety and then returning to
the start a good option, but there are also buses that can help for a single
day’s linear walk. Local circuits joining the main path are also shown on the very
detailed large-scale maps, with distances of each section clearly marked.

The Saints’
Shore
Way introduces the visitor to the outstanding beauty of the Breton coast in
all its aspects, and the rich resources of Brittany’s past and present.